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The Soviet Army is colloquially called this, even though its uniforms are dark green or khaki |
Red
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In the 1958 sequel, this Dr. Seuss character "Comes Back" |
The Cat in the Hat
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Challenge which followed "I can name it in one note" |
Name that tune.
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Texan who said, "For the 1st time in our history it is possible to conquer poverty" |
[Alex read the quote in his best(?) LBJ voice.]
Lyndon Baines Johnson
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Jean Simmons played preacher Sharon Falconer in '60 film version of this Sinclair Lewis novel |
Elmer Gantry
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Some buzz, some sound the Westminster Chimes, while some are just "ding dong"s |
(Adrienne: What are bells?)
doorbells
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Of some 14,000, 156, or none at all, number of religious Sunday schools publicly functioning in USSR |
(Steve: What is 156?) (Debbie: What is 14,000?)
none (at all, publicly functioning)
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He created the hobbits Frodo & Bilbo Baggins |
J.R. Tolkein
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Of Winter, Fall, Summer, or Spring, one you'd find introducing contestants on "Sale of the Century" |
(Alex: I'm glad you watch our show instead of that one. The lady's name is [*].)
Summer Bartholomew
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He complained that while 1 "d" was enough to spell God, it took 2 "d's" for Todd |
Abraham Lincoln
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Taking Sputnik passing overhead as a sign from heaven to give up rock 'n' roll, he joined the ministry |
Little Richard
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Forms of this include "Your Holiness", the Right Honorable the Earl of", & "To Whom It May Concern" |
[Note: The clue as displayed on screen was missing a set of quotation marks.]
addresses
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Soviet citizens call it "The Great Patriotic War" |
World War II
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Danny Kaye played this Thurber character in a 1947 film |
Walter Mitty
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1974-1977 game show whose theme began with a racetrack's call-to-post fanfare |
(Alex: Hosted by my friend Jim McKrell, [*].) [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
Celebrity Sweepstakes
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He changed the name of the presidential retreat from "Shangri-La" to "Camp David" |
(Adrienne: Who is Dwight Da...Who is [*]?)
President Dwight Eisenhower
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2 preachers seeking a major party nomination for president in 1988 |
Jesse Jackson & Pat Robertson
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In song, destination of the train "on Track 29" |
Chattanooga
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There are only 30 of these per thousand people in the USSR, compared with 522 per thousand in USA |
(Debbie: What are physicians?) (Adrienne: What are telephone books, uh, telephones?)
automobiles
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Profession of Donald E. Westlake's John Dortmunder |
thief
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During Prohibition, this president patronized a bootlegger to keep the White House stocked |
(Adrienne: Who is Hoobert Hoover?) (Alex: No, not Herbert Hoover.) (Steve: Who is Calvin Coolidge?)
Warren Harding
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Foremost Catholic TV religious broadcaster today is this nun from Alabama |
(Alex: 60 Minutes did a report on her last year, [*].)
Mother Angelica
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People marked by eccentric behavior or thinking, or the 1, 3, 5, 7, etc. on a pool table |
(Alex: We've got less than a minute to go.)
oddballs
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Originally showing the czar on horseback & carrying a lance, this smallest money unit means "lance" |
a kopek
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Character in "David Copperfield" who epitomizes the word "unctuous" |
(Steve: Mister Micawber.) (Alex: No, sorry.) --- (Alex: The correct response is, Who is [*]? Steve, I should caution you about phrasing.) (Steve: Sorry.) (Alex: You were wrong anyway, but you do have to remember to phrase it in the form of a question.)
Uriah Heep
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Asked what a minister had said in a sermon on sin, this man replied, "He said he was against it" |
(Alex: He didn't say much, but when he said something it was really good.)
Calvin Coolidge
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Author of the book subtitled "A Practical Guide to Mastering the Problems of Everyday Living" |
Norman Vincent Peale
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